From middle class focus to tax sops to fine print: 5 things that make GST 2.0 a mini Budget for consumers

Minutes after the finance minister announced key tax sops in what the Narendra Modi government is calling "next-generation reforms", market guru Anil Singhvi described the announcements as the biggest reform since the corporate tax cut in 2019. Events like this mirror the annual Union Budget presentation in Parliament — when consumers, businesses, policymakers, and economists begin decoding announcements the moment they are made.
From middle class focus to tax sops to fine print: 5 things that make GST 2.0 a mini Budget for consumers
If you look at the tax proposals in Union Budgets, you'll notice many similarities with the GST 2.0 reforms announced on September 3, 2025.

In a rare 10 pm press briefing on Wednesday, September 3, Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman unveiled major tax changes impacting the public at large. The late-night announcements immediately set off interpretation across consumers, corporates, policymakers, and experts.

First things first, here’s some food for thought.

What comes to mind when you think of the Union Budget?

Add Zee Business as a Preferred Source
  • Tax system simplification: A list of items and market buzz about what becomes cheaper or dearer
  • Stimulating demand: A focus on measures to boost domestic consumption
  • Benefits for citizens and small businesses: Generally, there's some good news for the common man and for the corporates

According to market guru Anil Singhvi, the tax relief in the form of the PM's promised "Diwali gift" reforms will boost consumption and aid economic growth in the long run. Zee Business Managing Editor Singhvi described GST 2.0 as the biggest reform since the corporate tax cut to an effective rate of 25 per cent in 2019, stating that the government's estimated revenue loss will be more than compensated in the long run with rising consumption.

Events like this are no different from annual Union Budget presentations in Parliament, when policy changes shake up the economic landscape directly with hundreds of thousands of implications for crores of consumers.

Here are five basic similarities between GST 2.0 and the Union Budget -- at least its ‘tax proposals’ part:

Policy simplification and rationalisation

The 56th GST Council meeting simplified the rate structure from four slabs (5, 12, 18, 28 per cent) to two main slabs -- 5 per cent (essentials) and 18 per cent (most goods and services) -- with a separate 40 per cent slab for luxury and sin goods.

Similar rationalisation efforts have been a Budget hallmark, whether in income tax slabs, corporate tax reductions, or customs duty simplification.

Focus on consumption and growth

GST 2.0 cuts taxes on hundreds of products across six categories, at an estimated cost of Rs 48,000 crore. Experts believe rising consumption will more than compensate for this.

Budgets too often stimulate demand -- from tax rebates on housing and automobiles to post-pandemic stimulus packages.

Spotlight on the common man, farmers, and small businesses

The reforms ease compliance for MSMEs, cut taxes on daily-use essentials, exempt life and health insurance, and slash levies on small cars, white goods, and farm equipment like tractors and fertilisers.

This echoes past Budgets that prioritised farmer welfare, MSME support, and relief for middle-class households.

Transparency and process simplification

The GST 2.0 reform introduces pre-filled returns and quicker refunds to enhance transparency and reduce litigation.

This has been a common feature in the Union Budgets in the past, with measures such as linking PAN with Aadhaar, enhancing TDS and e-invoicing norms.

Structural and sustainable reforms

Both GST 2.0 and Budgets, in general, stress long-term structural reforms, medium- and long-terms alike -- GST 2.0 with corrected inverted duties and rate rationalisation, and Budget focusing on infrastructure, investment incentives and job creation.

Both events reflect the government’s shift towards resilient and equitable growth, in tandem with its broader 'Atmanirbhar Bharat' (self-reliant India) and 'Viksit Bharat @ 2047' (Developed India @ 2047) ambitions.